Happy buyers of the 3D globe are saying this:

“The EarthViewer was just what I was looking for” – Colin Munday | Partner, The Web Workshop.

“This is crazy! Component works without any flaws. Bought it, copied it to server, implemented it as a iframe to joomla website. All in 15 minutes. Changed content and points on globe also in no-time!

Once again thanks for such a great component!”
digideu – in the comments section

I absolutely LOVE this! gothaunts – in the comments section

The Earth – Interactive 3D Globe

Around the world in 0,5 seconds… – without plugins! – using this 3D globe

With this amazing HTML5 globe, you can travel around the world, in a matter of secondes.
Show your points-of-interest with ease.

Spin it, Zoom it, Enjoy it

Give your visitors the freedom to easily browse through any point in the world, by spinning, clicking and zooming this beautiful interactive 3d globe.

Spin it with the mousebutton.

Zoom in or out with the mousewheel.

Click points-of-interest for lightbox with more info.

+ 30 configurable options

Highlight any point in the world, with this 3d globe – HTML5 component.

Convert any div on your website into a interactive 3D Globe, using this simple syntax:

$('div#insert_div_id_here').doGlobe({
radius: 200
});

Add clickable points-of-interest(poi) to the globe, using standard divs:

<div id="poi_A" class="poi hidden" data-lat="32" data-long="124">
This content will pop up into a lightbox,
when the spot on the globe is clicked.
</div><!-- /POI_A -->

3D Globe Compatability

This component uses Three.js for the 3d rendering, utilizing webGl.

“WebGL (Web Graphics Library) is a JavaScript API for rendering interactive 3D graphics within any compatible web browser without the use of plug-ins. WebGL programs consist of control code written in JavaScript and shader code that is executed on a computer’s Graphics Processing Unit (GPU).” source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebGL

3D Globe Desktop Browser Implementation

Mozilla Firefox – WebGL has been enabled on all platforms that have a capable graphics card with updated drivers since version 4.0.[9] Mozilla Firefox 8.0 and newer versions use Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) to control all WebGL cross-domain textures.

Google Chrome – WebGL has been enabled on all platforms that have a capable graphics card with updated drivers since version 9. Google Chrome 13.0 and newer versions use Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS) to control all WebGL cross-domain textures.